Democrats' responsibility for Bush radicalism
By Glenn Greenwald, Salon
It is staggering, and truly disgusting,
that even in August, 2007 -- almost six
years removed from the 9/11 attacks and
with the Bush presidency cemented as one
of the weakest and most despised in
American history -- that George W. Bush
can "demand" that the Congress jump and
re-write legislation at his will,
vesting in him still greater
surveillance power, by warning them,
based solely on his say-so, that if they
fail to comply with his demands, the
next Terrorist attack will be their
fault. And they jump and scamper and
comply (Meteor Blades has the list of
the 16 Senate Democrats voting in favor;
the House will soon follow).
I just finished a discussion panel with
ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero
which was originally planned to examine
his new (superb) book about the work his
organization has done for years in
battling the endless expansion of
executive power and presidential
lawbreaking. But the only issue anyone
in the room really wanted to discuss --
including us -- was the outrage
unfolding on Capitol Hill. And the anger
was almost universally directed where it
belongs: at Congressional Democrats, who
increasingly bear more and more
responsibility for the assaults on our
constitutional liberties and
unparalleled abuses of government power
-- many (probably most) of which, it
should always be emphasized, remain
concealed rather than disclosed.
Examine virtually every Bush scandal and
it increasingly bears the mark not
merely of Democratic capitulation, but
Democratic participation. In August of
2006, the Supreme Court finally asserted
the first real limit on Bush's radical
executive power theories in Hamdan, only
for Congress, months later, to
completely eviscerate those minimal
limits -- and then go far beyond -- by
enacting the grotesque Military
Commissions Act with the support of
substantial numbers of Democrats. What
began as a covert and illegal Bush
interrogation and detention program
became the officially sanctioned,
bipartisan policy of the United States.
Grave dangers are posed to our basic
constitutional safeguards by the
replacement of Sandra Day O'Connor with
Sam Alito, whose elevation to the
Supreme Court Congressional Democrats
chose to permit. Vast abuses and
criminality in surveillance remain
undisclosed, uninvestigated and
unimpeded because Congressional
Democrats have stood meekly by while the
administration refuses to disclose what
it has been doing in how it spies on us.
And we remain in Iraq, in direct
defiance of the will of the vast
majority of the country, because the
Democratic Beltway establishment lacks
both the courage and the desire to
compel an end to that war.
And now Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid,
with revealing symbolism, cancel their
scheduled appearances this morning at
Yearly Kos because George Bush ordered
them to remain in Washington in order to
re-write and expand FISA -- a law which
he has repeatedly refused to allow to be
revised for years and which he has
openly and proudly violated.
Congressional Democrats know virtually
nothing about how the Bush
administration has been eavesdropping on
our conversations because the
administration refused to tell them and
they passively accepted this state of
affairs.
The intense rush to amend this
legislation means that most of them have
no idea what they are actually enacting
-- even less of an idea than they
typically have. But what they know is
that George Bush and Fox News and the
Beltway establishment have told them
that they would be irresponsible and
weak and unserious if they failed to
comply with George Bush's instructions,
and hence, they comply. In the American
political landscape, there have been
profound changes in public opinion since
September of 2001. But in the Beltway,
among our political and media
establishment, virtually nothing has
changed.
I don't have time this morning to
dissect the various excesses and dangers
of the new FISA amendments, though Marty
Lederman and Steve Benen both do a
typically thorough job in that regard.
Suffice to say, craven fear, as usual,
is the author of this debacle.
There are many mythologies about what
are the defining beliefs and motivations
of bloggers and their readers and the
attendees at Yearly Kos. One of the
principal myths is that it is all driven
by a familiar and easily defined
ideological agenda and/or a partisan
attachment to the Democratic Party. That
is all false.
The common, defining political principle
here -- what resonates far more
powerfully than any other idea -- is a
fervent and passionate belief in our
country's constitutional framework, the
core liberties it secures, and the
checks and balances it offers as a
safeguard against tyrannical power.
Those who fail to defend that framework,
or worse, those who are passively or
actively complicit in its further
erosion, are all equally culpable. With
each day that passes, the radicalism and
extremism originally spawned in secret
by the Bush presidency becomes less and
less his fault and more and more the
fault of those who -- having discovered
what they have been doing and having
been given the power to stop it --
instead acquiesce to it and, worse,
enable and endorse it.